2025-09-10
Discover the best scholarships in Germany for Moroccans in 2025 — deadlines, amounts, eligibility, and step-by-step tips to land your funding.
Every year, thousands of Moroccan students dream of studying in Germany — and the good news is that Germany actively funds that dream. Whether you are finishing your licence in Casablanca or already hold a master's degree from a Moroccan university, there are real scholarships worth thousands of euros waiting for you. This guide breaks down exactly which programs exist, how much they pay, what documents you need, and — critically — the mistakes that kill most applications before they even reach a reviewer.
Germany has more than 400 public universities and universities of applied sciences (Fachhochschulen), most of which charge little to no tuition. Public universities in states like Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg, and North Rhine-Westphalia charge a semester contribution of roughly €150–€350 — not tuition, just administrative fees.
Beyond the low cost of study, Germany has a bilateral relationship with Morocco through the German-Moroccan governmental commission, which means German funding bodies specifically target Moroccan candidates. The German embassy in Rabat processes more student visa applications than almost any other North African mission, which tells you something about the demand — and the infrastructure to support it.
Add to that a post-study work visa that lets you stay 18 months after graduation to find employment, and you have a pathway, not just a degree.
The DAAD is Germany's largest and most well-known scholarship organisation. For Moroccan students, there are several relevant programs:
Deadline: Most DAAD programs for the following academic year close between October and December. Check daad.de for exact dates by program.
What DAAD looks for: Academic excellence (top 30% of your class is a rough benchmark), relevant professional experience (usually 2+ years for postgraduate programs), and a clear motivation letter explaining why Germany, why this program, and how you will apply the skills back home.
The Agence Marocaine de Coopération Internationale (AMCI) manages Morocco's side of bilateral scholarship agreements, including those with Germany. These grants are co-funded and typically offer:
Applications go through AMCI's portal (amci.ma) and require you to already have an acceptance letter from a German university. This is a chicken-and-egg situation — you need the university place first, then you apply for funding. Start your university application process at least 8–10 months before your intended start date.
The Heinrich Böll Foundation is affiliated with the German Green Party and focuses on ecology, democracy, and social justice. It funds both undergraduate and postgraduate students.
Moroccans applying should demonstrate involvement in civil society, environmental projects, or human rights work. The foundation pays serious attention to your personal statement. Apply at boell.de — the foundation accepts applications twice a year, in March and September.
The FES is linked to the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and funds students committed to social democracy, trade union values, and international solidarity.
Visit fes.de and look for the international student funding section.
KAS is linked to the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) and is one of the most generous foundations for international students.
Apply at kas.de. The foundation runs information sessions in partnership with the DAAD and German embassies — watch for events at the Goethe-Institut in Rabat or Casablanca.
Many German universities offer their own funding:
Always check the international office (Akademisches Auslandsamt) website of your target university for institution-specific grants.
While each program has its own checklist, here is what almost every German scholarship for Moroccans requires:
Tip: Get your documents notarised at a Moroccan notary (adoul or notaire), then have them apostilled at the Moroccan Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Rabat before translation.
Not necessarily — but it helps enormously.
The Goethe-Institut has centres in Rabat and Casablanca offering A1 through C2 courses. Online platforms like Deutsche Welle's free "Deutsch lernen" portal and apps like Babbel can supplement your preparation.
Planning a move to Germany as a Moroccan student is an 18-month project if done right.
Waiting too long: Most scholarships close 10–12 months before the study program starts. If you discover DAAD in June and want to start in October of the same year, you have missed it.
Applying without German: Even for English programs, foundations like KAS and FES expect at least conversational German. Applications from candidates with zero German signal poor preparation.
Generic motivation letters: Foundation reviewers read hundreds of letters. "I want to study in Germany because it is a great country with excellent universities" is not a motivation — it is a rejection. Be specific: name the professor, name the research group, cite a paper.
Ignoring the return clause: Many bilateral and DAAD scholarships expect you to return to Morocco for at least two years after your studies. Ignoring this in your application — or worse, violating it later — has real consequences.
Missing the Sperrkonto step: Even if you have a scholarship covering living costs, your visa application still needs proof of funds initially. Some scholarship contracts are issued after visa approval, creating a bureaucratic gap that surprises many applicants.
Using Arabic-only documents without certified translations: German institutions will not process Arabic-only files. Always submit certified German or English translations alongside originals.
Scholarships in Germany for Moroccans are real, generous, and actively being offered right now — by the DAAD, by political foundations, by universities, and through bilateral agreements between Morocco and Germany. The competition is real too, but it is beatable with a strong academic record, a compelling motivation letter, and a timeline that gives you enough runway.
Start your language preparation today. Map out your target universities. And if you need help putting together a CV or cover letter that actually stands out to German institutions, book a consultation with our German immigration specialist (€16) to plan your move — our CV builder and Anschreiben generator are built exactly for Moroccan candidates navigating this process.
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